From the Pastor – 15th Sunday in Ordinary Time
From the Pastor – 15 th Sunday in Ordinary Time
Stewardship Reflection - In today’s Gospel passage from Luke, we read the well-known parable of the Good Samaritan. Here, Jesus teaches us in rich detail what stewardship in action looks like. In fact, this parable could just as accurately be called the parable of the Good Steward.
The first thing we note about the Good Samaritan is that he is aware of the needs of those around him and responds generously. While the priest and Levi brush right past the man on the side of the road, the Samaritan is watching for those who might be in need. He has a hospitable way of looking at the world around him, and so, he is able to “see” in a way that the others did not, and he was “moved with compassion at the sight” of the man.
Next, we see the Good Samaritan spring into action to serve this man, setting aside his own schedule and plans in order to meet his needs. He does not just give the man a few dollars or offer some quick words of encouragement from across the road. He goes right up to the man. He cleans and bandages his wounds. He puts the man on his own animal and brings him to an inn where he can heal. He ensures that the innkeeper would continue to look after him and he commits to returning to the man on his way back.
That is how we live out God’s commandments. That is true hospitality and service. That is how a good steward springs into action when he comes upon a neighbor in need. And Jesus says to each of us personally, just as He did in today’s Gospel, “Go and do likewise.” ©Catholic Stewardship Conference
Pastoral Pondering – Our Faith Formation director, Theresa Benson, was sharing some thoughts about some of the things she has been reading about holiness and growth in the spiritual life. In “The Fulfillment of all Desire” Ralph Martin notes that “to be holy is not primarily a matter of how many Rosaries we say or how much Christian activity we are engaged in; it’s a matter of having our heart transformed into a heart of love. It is a matter of fulfilling the great commandments which sum up the whole law and the prophets: to love God and to love our neighbor wholeheartedly.
Pope St. John Paul II, writing in Novo Millennio Ineunte notes that parishes in the third millennium are to “become genuine schools of prayer, where the meeting with Christ is expressed not just in imploring Help but also in thanksgiving, praise, adoration, contemplation, listening and ardent devotion, until the heart truly falls in love…it would be wrong to think that ordinary Christians can be content with a shallow prayer that is unable to fulfill their whole life.”
In my own encounter with Christ, there are hills and valleys. I believe this is true for most of us. However, if we, together, can help St. Mark become more and more a “genuine school of prayer” then we will not only help ourselves but we will help those who are searching and seeking meaning in their lives to come to know Christ.
If we do not fundamentally know Jesus Christ, then no program, no matter how good, no social outreach, no matter how effective, and no effort of evangelization, no matter how well intended will bear fruit. My hope and desire for all of us is that we together grow in holiness; that we seek to know Christ Jesus. Only then can we truly make Him present in our words and deeds.